John Coltrane "My Favorite Things" 1961 (Reelin' In The Years Archives)

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 7 фев 2025
  • Here's Jazz Icon John Coltrane with his legendary Quintet featuring Eric Dolphy on flute, Elvin Jones on drums, McCoy Tyner on piano and Reggie Workman on bass, performing one of Coltrane's most beloved interpretations.
    This song as well as many other classic Coltrane performances can be found on this DVD-www.amazon.com/...
    The Reelin' In The Years archive houses one of the world's most extensive jazz catalogs, covering every expression from dixieland to swing to bebop and beyond. We have full concerts from all of the legends including Louis Armstrong, Billie Holiday, Duke Ellington, Miles Davis, Ella Fitzgerald, Dave Brubeck, Sonny Rollins, and many, many more.
    Reelin' In The Years Productions houses the world's largest library of music footage, containing over 20,000 hours of material covering nearly every genre from the last 60 years. We have live concerts, TV appearances, interviews, in-studio segments, b-roll and more. In addition to music we have thousands of hours of interviews with the most recognizable celebrities, comedians, politicians, athletes, artists and authors of the 20th Century. If you need footage for your film, documentary, TV show, commercial, museum exhibit or presentation, we are your one-stop shop. Visit our online database at www.reelininthe... to explore our archive, but please email us as we are constantly adding new material to the archive. We do not supply material to fans or collectors under any circumstance, so please do not contact us if that is your intention.

Комментарии • 501

  • @njclondon2009
    @njclondon2009 7 лет назад +407

    Coltrane once said to Miles Davis in an agitated state, "Miles, I just can't figure out how to end a record...". Miles replied, " John, just take the horn out of your mouth"

  • @rocklight1184
    @rocklight1184 Год назад +45

    No fake smiles on their faces, no trying to impress the audience with crazy moves or anything. Just a group of outstanding professionals doing their thing. Masters of their crafts!

    • @nevilleattkins586
      @nevilleattkins586 5 месяцев назад +1

      So unlike the crazy mecano modernism of the set.

  • @Euthymia
    @Euthymia Год назад +37

    My god, these guys weren't playing music, they were channeling music....they went beyond it to a place where they WERE music. I'm sobbing listening to this, there's just so much joy in it

    • @gellison93
      @gellison93 Год назад +6

      Touches the soul doesn't it. Just Beautiful

    • @Gurci28
      @Gurci28 8 месяцев назад

      @@gellison93 Mathematically wonderful! 1:11

    • @Gurci28
      @Gurci28 8 месяцев назад

      Choose your favorite and interesting things to do while listening to Coltrane's jazz music, please. 1:23

    • @Gurci28
      @Gurci28 8 месяцев назад

      Concentration, focus and relaxation at the same time, unbelievable! 3:21

    • @ray1love1
      @ray1love1 7 месяцев назад

      I am to it just make me think

  • @CUSHLOMOCKREE
    @CUSHLOMOCKREE 6 лет назад +106

    I WAS 18 on July 17, 1967. I exited the subway on W. 4 St. I passed a newspaper stand and saw that he had died. It hit me in the stomach, and I cried. I had lost my father...again.

    • @mananaadamia1657
      @mananaadamia1657 3 года назад +1

      Yes

    • @mananaadamia1657
      @mananaadamia1657 3 года назад +2

      I know

    • @ramanpreetsingh2206
      @ramanpreetsingh2206 3 года назад +2

      Damn.... That's some rough past u got at the moment😶

    • @ayezay2677
      @ayezay2677 6 месяцев назад

      God Bless You All In Jesus Name Amen Jesus Is The King And The Lord Of All The Alpha And The Omega

  • @canalrandom7912
    @canalrandom7912 Год назад +14

    A soprano sax and flute in unison playing the main theme is something I didn't know I needed

  • @bigchungus2063
    @bigchungus2063 2 года назад +15

    The world was robbed of John Coltrane way to early May This Saint Rest In Peace

  • @johnmccue4925
    @johnmccue4925 7 лет назад +120

    Elvin Jones on drums steers this song along beautifully.

    • @globalpeasant
      @globalpeasant 3 года назад +6

      Check out Elvin on Afro Blue ! Awesome! If you haven’t seen it already .

    • @JudgeDredd_
      @JudgeDredd_ 2 года назад +3

      He’s back there groovin’ man I can feel it!!!

    • @carlbradley6171
      @carlbradley6171 2 года назад +3

      The John Coltrane Quartet - 6 years of beautiful music. The driving force and powerhouse was Elvin Jones with his very unique style.

    • @PavJedrusiak
      @PavJedrusiak 2 года назад +2

      Genius.

  • @heatseeker9738
    @heatseeker9738 6 лет назад +158

    McCoy Tyner on the piano is the real meat of this song, I think. Those chords are beautiful.

    • @hilbertsinn6886
      @hilbertsinn6886 6 лет назад +15

      On the studio recording yes, but here I'd say it's Dolphy's flute solo, which is beyond extraordinary.
      Both are are perhaps the very best I have ever heard on that instrument.

    • @eric4637
      @eric4637 4 года назад +6

      RIP

    • @vitorfernandes651
      @vitorfernandes651 4 года назад +4

      You must be joking. The sax part is easy more interesting to the ear. Piano is a bit boring like background music.

    • @stuartmcgillivray9879
      @stuartmcgillivray9879 4 года назад +4

      100% agree. Also even as a drummer I think Elvington Jones is overplaying! There i said it, pure sacrilege

    • @aquariusrizing
      @aquariusrizing 3 года назад

      He's the perfect foil for the sax. Just right.

  • @707Errol
    @707Errol 11 лет назад +220

    Listening to Coltrane is like a warm blanket in the coldest night.

  • @nateo6518
    @nateo6518 4 года назад +19

    Can't we all just hear this and get along?

  • @宮崎和久-e7z
    @宮崎和久-e7z 3 месяца назад +3

    This is a rare video because Eric Dolphy is playing the flute. I've been coming here for over a decade since I started enjoying RUclips.

  • @しかましげあき
    @しかましげあき 6 лет назад +6

    コルトレーンとドルフィーの孤高の天才二人!最高ですね!

  • @MsTuty
    @MsTuty 9 лет назад +54

    Coltrane is a pride for human race!

    • @Gurci28
      @Gurci28 Год назад

      John William Coltrane is one of the most influential jazz musicians to ever play, and today remains even more relevant than during his life. A saxophonist, he was initially drawn to the popular jazz formats of bebop and hard bop, before eventually becoming one of the guiding forces behind free jazz. 1:00 [The National WWII Museum]

    • @Gurci28
      @Gurci28 Год назад +1

      Coltrane was an extremely humble, non-violent man.

    • @Gurci28
      @Gurci28 Год назад

      Besides being a professional at the saxophone, Coltrane studied alto sax, clarinet, and tenor sax.

    • @Gurci28
      @Gurci28 Год назад

      Widely regarded as Coltrane's masterpiece and one of the greatest jazz albums of all time, A Love Supreme was recorded in 1964 and takes the form of a four-part suite: 'Acknowledgement', 'Resolution', 'Pursuance' and 'Psalm'. 10:00 [Jazzfuel]

  • @marlondeetjen2471
    @marlondeetjen2471 2 года назад +40

    Coltrane will forever be passed down from my kids to grandkids. I refuse to let his work die down & it never will ! Just beautiful

  • @gellison93
    @gellison93 Год назад +10

    This will forever remind me of my granny and her siblings educating me on the importance of music. Our heritage. Our struggle. Our love

  • @RevBobAldo
    @RevBobAldo 10 лет назад +85

    Saw him play this at Crawford's Grill # 2 in Pittsburgh the year this song came out. You could sit right in front of the bandstand and hear all the jazz greats who came to town for the price of a one dollar beer, or maybe a two dollar chicken dinner. Those were great days!

    • @RodericSpode
      @RodericSpode 4 года назад +12

      That is awesome. I need to finish work on my time machine

    • @FredWoodard
      @FredWoodard 3 года назад +8

      That must’ve been a mind blowing experience!

    • @bobosocialo4313
      @bobosocialo4313 3 года назад +2

      Lucky man

  • @pauldecristoforo
    @pauldecristoforo 9 лет назад +103

    Coltranes embellishments are beyond what others do even today.
    He was literally ahead of his time.

    • @Abcdefghijk1263y
      @Abcdefghijk1263y 5 лет назад +5

      Soothing, velvet, warmth, familiar...

    • @ryanphelan6861
      @ryanphelan6861 4 года назад +5

      Dolphy was an equal what he did on bass clarinet is still innovative do sad both died young loved them together with trained rhthm section.....just do incredible. To communicate that easily through an instrument

    • @johnsoncharles630
      @johnsoncharles630 4 года назад +3

      Fascinating and thank you very much. (Azim)

  • @vicb4901
    @vicb4901 9 месяцев назад +6

    Elvin Jones performs like a waterfall. Eric Dolphy is the guest star while St. Coltrane, the master of musical spirituality makes this nice Broadway musical waltz extraordinary forever...

  • @ShawnC.T.
    @ShawnC.T. 8 лет назад +84

    This 60's Jazz masterpiece is simply, class personified, R.I.P. John Coltrane, Elvin Jones, and Eric Dolphy...

    • @jennifergibbons08
      @jennifergibbons08 4 года назад +16

      And now the mighty McCoy. RIP.

    • @canalrandom7912
      @canalrandom7912 Год назад

      Some respect for Jimmy Garrison as well

    • @canalrandom7912
      @canalrandom7912 Год назад +1

      It's actually Reggie Workman on this recording but well, respect for both, respect to every jazz musician that has ever lived on this earth

    • @abdoulayethiandoumgueye6084
      @abdoulayethiandoumgueye6084 26 дней назад

      Piano MacCoy Tyner...drums Elwin Johnes....bass JJimmy GARRISON and the guest with flute Eric Dolphy

  • @carbonsiren
    @carbonsiren 7 лет назад +96

    Coltrane's playing from 6:47 onward completely transforms what Eric Dolphy had been doing to the composition and changes its course until its end. It is so progressively tense, tethering on melancholic until it transforms into just that for a single minute, then ends.
    I'm far from a jazz scholar, but this seriously amazed me. What an incredible finish.

    • @brittlyle3523
      @brittlyle3523 Год назад +2

      I know the single minute you speak off. Great analysis.......

    • @bvanwart
      @bvanwart Год назад

      same thing as Giant Steps

  • @MazingMania
    @MazingMania 6 лет назад +21

    The way Dolphy and Coltrane mesh at 6:43 - stunning!

  • @angelareele858
    @angelareele858 2 года назад +6

    A flickering,glistening golden diamond of expression....
    That defies death and time........

  • @Frank-ec2ll
    @Frank-ec2ll 5 лет назад +43

    I can listen to Coltrane's Quartet's renditions of MY Favorite Things again and again and again for hours and hours. McCoy Tyner with his block chording was a masterful fit for Coltrane. Eric Dolphy's flute solos were special when he played with Coltrane. Jimmy Garrison, Elvin Jones and each member of this group were all masters in their own right .

    • @KC______
      @KC______ Год назад

      True, but in this video and in the original studio recording its Steve Davis on bass not Jimmy Garrison. ✌🏽🗽✊🏾🇺🇸

  • @ranielyfire
    @ranielyfire 6 лет назад +14

    So much good music happening in the 60s wow

    • @emilianoturazzi
      @emilianoturazzi 3 года назад +1

      along with 20s the best jazz season in my opinion: an enormous amount of variety and creativity, even minor figures had strong personalities and even older musicians belonging to other eras were still alive and creative (Ellington, Arnstrong, Hawkins... just to name three)

    • @k4kafka
      @k4kafka 3 года назад +2

      Yes…You should’ve been there to see these guys in a small,smoke-filled nightclub

  • @Mx5322
    @Mx5322 6 лет назад +41

    For some reason Eric Dolphy really gets me; its sounds off key or wrong at times but there's an emotion in it that's hypnotizing.

    • @gibberconfirm166
      @gibberconfirm166 6 лет назад +12

      He would listen to the birds and their existential assertions : (

    • @nizzaz
      @nizzaz 3 года назад +13

      I know right? When he starts the first note is well "off key" and he gets a surprised stare from McCoy actually ;) But it sounds awesome. In music as in life, you play the note wrong or right, it doesn't matter: time passes and things you hear become things you've heard :)

    • @bobdownes162
      @bobdownes162 2 года назад +3

      @@nizzaz It matters to me as a Flutist.
      Only a handful of notes that are executed are in tune. Some tnotes played in the upper range are almost half a tone sharper in pitch than intended. Blasting away on the instrument is partly the cause.
      But it is possible to play very loud on the instrumenrt without being out of tune.
      His bassclarinet, tuning wise was always Spot On.
      Coltrane plays the soprano perfectly in tune. A difficult thing to accomplish on this instrument.

    • @goodbababadbaba6370
      @goodbababadbaba6370 Год назад

      Way out of tune flute

    • @user-mc7ov2ru2r
      @user-mc7ov2ru2r Год назад +2

      "There are no wrong notes" Theophilus monk.

  • @niyiawe3183
    @niyiawe3183 6 лет назад +13

    Crying cos I just discovered a treasure

  • @RnBLover1997
    @RnBLover1997 7 лет назад +12

    Discovered Coltrane last year. I'm not kidding when I'm saying that it was one of the best things that could have happened to my life. I'm now a massive fan and I'm thinking about learning to play saxophone one day.

    • @zrushin
      @zrushin 3 месяца назад

      So did you ever end up learning it?

  • @beahafkenscheid8421
    @beahafkenscheid8421 4 года назад +11

    Some of the best jazz musicains together

  • @jamespjohnson
    @jamespjohnson 4 года назад +11

    Sheets of sound! Trane lives!
    The Universal Language!
    This epitomizes the best that America offers the world.
    Thanks for sharing!!

  • @dantef4399
    @dantef4399 4 года назад +34

    I was introduced to John Coltrane when I was a freshmen in college 2007..jazz history lol.. this guy and his fellow musicians were amazing .. the discipline, the passion for their craft always impressed me..next to my wife this is the best thing I got from school ! Peace

  • @からすカラス-v4f
    @からすカラス-v4f 4 года назад +2

    コルトレーンが最も好んで一番演奏回数が多かった曲ですねぇ〜ドルフィーの参加が良いですねぇ🎶🤗

    • @glennhecker4422
      @glennhecker4422 Год назад

      There's something really special about the brief period in which Eric Dolphy was in the band (1961?) He really added to the sound and fit in BEAUTIFULLY.

  • @runthomas
    @runthomas 5 лет назад +23

    must say ...that drumming was absolutley astounding from alvin all the way through ..it was kind of rythmical and yet not so ..a lot of character and nice distinct leadership.....wonderful...the flute was also amazing ..especially the high notes...beautiful

  • @pavanatanaya
    @pavanatanaya Год назад +1

    McCoy never lets us get comfortable.

  • @BopWalk
    @BopWalk 2 года назад +9

    Mccoy Tyner and Elvin Jones absoutely tearing it up, bravo!!!

    • @nyterpfan
      @nyterpfan 2 года назад +1

      Their performances are truly transcendent here--artistic brilliance!!

  • @CeeWitz
    @CeeWitz 10 лет назад +22

    6:50-6:56: one of the greatest single notes in the history of jazz.

  • @chuckm4540
    @chuckm4540 6 лет назад +9

    The always essential Eric Dolphy! This is an all-pro lineup for sure!!

  • @sarahvanbrakle3573
    @sarahvanbrakle3573 Год назад +1

    Man what a session but you gotta keep an eye on that DRUMMER. If he aint for real I dont know who is SUPERB

  • @landesart
    @landesart 20 дней назад

    McCoy Tyner‘s so good, so full of chords and melodies. Pure magic - I explored their music at the right time. I was 17 then.

  • @uhumanu6600
    @uhumanu6600 8 лет назад +31

    40 years before my time, St. John walked the earth...

  • @dennispearson871
    @dennispearson871 2 года назад +10

    The variation on the original theme , and Flow of these phenomenal jazz artists was absolutely INCREDIBLE !!!.....

  • @pauliewalnuts2800
    @pauliewalnuts2800 4 года назад +16

    Rest in peace to this legendary quintet, I wish there was more music like this today

  • @Dabbers1959
    @Dabbers1959 5 лет назад +18

    My favourite version of Coltrane's My Favourite Things. They all play with such percussive attack here.

    • @sunflowerguy5314
      @sunflowerguy5314 2 года назад

      Check out the version on a bootleg called "John Coltrane Visit to Scandinavia ", it is by far the most beautiful Coltrane I've ever heard

    • @markrenton3357
      @markrenton3357 Год назад

      100 % agree

  • @remotedman
    @remotedman 11 лет назад +40

    The first time I heard John Coltrane do this cover of the American classic, I was attending the University of Pittsburgh in 1980. I had a friend that was into jazz and kept playing this record over and over. I finally got.
    There are very few instances where people prefer the cover over the original. This record became one of his signature recordings.

    • @BMWDamun
      @BMWDamun 10 лет назад +3

      Nate Harris at Pitt introduced me to Coltrane's rendition a few years earlier.

    • @jeanclaudeduce33
      @jeanclaudeduce33 10 лет назад +2

      The day I discovered the album...I think it changed my vision and paying. I am more of a Hendrix kind of player. So much soul in the playing here though.

    • @robzbobz
      @robzbobz 6 лет назад +2

      I discovered this while attending Pitt also! Had a great drum teacher there who also introduced me to Elvin Jones' playing.

  • @WoundedEgo
    @WoundedEgo 8 лет назад +22

    I wonder why he never smiles but his music makes me smile.

    • @AlessandroForghieri
      @AlessandroForghieri 8 лет назад +9

      According to his biography, the reason he seldom smiled was rather prosaic - he had bad teeth (he was keen on sweet food) and was wary to show them. Which does not prevent me to smile when I listen to his timeless music.

    • @rodimusgamer7620
      @rodimusgamer7620 5 лет назад +1

      I think is was cuz your embochure would get messed up and you couldn't make a proper sound

    • @emilianoturazzi
      @emilianoturazzi 3 года назад

      @@AlessandroForghieri I think he had bad teeth because he had been addicted with heroin...

  • @JohnKasarinlan
    @JohnKasarinlan 6 лет назад +8

    He's so godlike with the soprano sax.

  • @alroulexe4996
    @alroulexe4996 7 лет назад +30

    Pure magic, pure expression, pure love of music, pure inspiration...

  • @brionbee
    @brionbee 9 лет назад +38

    When Eric Dolphy comes in he just attacks with beauty!!! Coltrane spoke of Dolphy as his favorite musician. That's saying a lot. Dolphy used to sit on his back porch in LA and talk with the birds with his flute in such a way that they would be answering him!!! Wow. This combination - The John Coltrane QUINTET - is in my opinion the greatest assembly of listening, pushing, yet subtle and innovative jazz musicians to date. Garrison on Bass, holding it down wherever the others would take it. Tyler on keys, supplying foundation, depth, and yet space and room for a wide range of melodies to be explored by the horn (And in this case the flute). Eleven Jones on percussion, always attacking, always carrying the momentum, and always ready for subtlety, listening for every new variation and accent played by his compatriots. And Coltrane. Coltrane... John played what was in him, and what was in Him!!! Melody that never stopped pouring forth, and that being such that it builds melody in the soul of the hearer. John had so much inside just clawing to escape. He was never satisfied, always experimenting with reeds, mouthpieces, and even his diet and clothing, in order to attain what he regarded as the perfect sovereign. He was tortured and gifted and addicted to beauty. He died of a heroine overdose seeking these. His playing is all we have left of this gentle powerhouse. And what a legacy...

    • @polymath7
      @polymath7 9 лет назад +4

      +brion burkett Yeah, Dolphy's extraordinary - truly extraordinary - flute solo is a large part of why I consider this perhaps the single greatest musical performance ever captured on record.
      He's as essential here as Tyner is on the studio version.

    • @carlosespinoza8699
      @carlosespinoza8699 7 лет назад +4

      He died to liver cancer.... the creator thought he was getting to close to the divine on earth so he made him an angel .

    • @Jefferson-ly5qe
      @Jefferson-ly5qe 6 лет назад +3

      When Dolphy comes in, he turns the whole performance upside down in just a few notes. Really something else.

    • @IAmDumb2
      @IAmDumb2 6 лет назад +4

      As Carlos Espinoza pointed out, he died of liver cancer, not a heroin overdose, in 1967. I want to add that he had quit heroin ten years earlier in 1957

    • @carguy3460
      @carguy3460 6 лет назад +1

      I was listening to this while working and immediately went to see what was happening at this point. That's Dolphy??? Astounding!

  • @pauldonald827
    @pauldonald827 6 лет назад +11

    I love this so much. The great quartet plus Dolphy at their peak. I grew up with this, and hope to be buried to it.

    • @catwilloughby211
      @catwilloughby211 Год назад +1

      Played at both of my parents memorial celebrations. Will play in the rotation at mine.

  • @sarahvanbrakle3573
    @sarahvanbrakle3573 Год назад +1

    I WAS GONNA SAY WONDERFUL THINGS ABOUT THIS WORK OF ART BUT THESE JAZZ KATS SAID IT ALL LOVE LOVE

    • @Gurci28
      @Gurci28 8 месяцев назад

      When famed jazz saxophonist, composer and bandleader John Coltrane wanted to illustrate his understanding of music, he turned to mathematics. 6:52

    • @Gurci28
      @Gurci28 8 месяцев назад

      There are math enthusiasts who embrace classical music, especially the works of Bach, Beethoven and Mozart. 1:03

    • @Gurci28
      @Gurci28 8 месяцев назад

      Music is made up of a series of beats and rhythms, and these can be represented mathematically through the use of fractions and ratios. 9:06

    • @Gurci28
      @Gurci28 8 месяцев назад

      Perhaps every musical composer is, in one way or another, also a mathematician. Coltrane’s circle, a symmetrical code or a mandala adorned with numbers and letters, expresses precisely what is, at once, both paradoxical and obvious. [Faena Aleph] 9:36

    • @Gurci28
      @Gurci28 8 месяцев назад

      In an interview with Down Beat magazine, the jazz legend Thelonious Monk once said that “All musicians are subconsciously mathematicians.” [University of Waterloo] 8:08

  • @007saxa
    @007saxa 11 лет назад +28

    coltrane of soprano....eric dolphy on flute.....the sky's not the limit

  • @nestordrums521
    @nestordrums521 5 лет назад +12

    Elvin Jones is just on cruise control on this performance - high and tight, lovin it

  • @narendrapanjwani1243
    @narendrapanjwani1243 9 лет назад +17

    John Coltrane on sax, McCoy on the piano, and music as improvisation, by people who poured their soul into it - these are some of the basic pleasures of life.

  • @danarucker8007
    @danarucker8007 Год назад +3

    Such a beautiful calming piece 🎷 🪈

  • @klaytonvonkluge4905
    @klaytonvonkluge4905 9 лет назад +23

    real musicians... true feel, that drummer & pianist are outta this world

    • @ShawnC.T.
      @ShawnC.T. 5 лет назад +1

      @Klayton Von Kluge Elvin Jones didn't play the drums here, he made love to 'em, he was so smooth as a drummer, and a very under appreciated one as well. He doesn't receive not nearly the credit he deserves as/for being one of the greatest Jazz drummers in music history...

    • @sodayumsouthern
      @sodayumsouthern 5 лет назад

      @@ShawnC.T. Preach

    • @nicolaischmidt368
      @nicolaischmidt368 5 лет назад

      S. Chris T. Couldn’t agree more

  • @drapeblind
    @drapeblind 11 лет назад +2

    an important historical record from our epoch. they'll be watching this 500 years from now.

  • @nizzaz
    @nizzaz 8 лет назад +17

    Pheeeew this version is just sooo beautiful

    • @vollsticks
      @vollsticks 8 лет назад +4

      Totally agree, this and the version from the American Splendor soundtrack are two of my favourite things. Hey I did a pun.
      At his first UK concert, 'Trane played a 45 minute long version of this.

  • @hobumbra1986
    @hobumbra1986 10 лет назад +3

    Coltrane est génial, tous les musiciens le sont. Eric Dolphy a le génie d'élever la flûte à des sommets jamais atteints auparavant !

  • @robertosozio3425
    @robertosozio3425 4 года назад +3

    Great jazz Coltrane one Big,

  • @nyterpfan
    @nyterpfan 10 лет назад +17

    This is IMHO Coltrane's greatest recording of "Favorite Things"--McCoy Tyner and Elvin Jones are phenomenal---Tyner's solo is so beautiful and elegant, and Jones has that incredible rolling beat keeping the groove flowing--one of the all-time seminal works of jazz!!

    • @MiqelDotCom
      @MiqelDotCom 3 года назад +2

      check out MFT from Newport 1963, another one of the top versions! Energetic and good recording quality, too.

    • @davematey
      @davematey 3 года назад +1

      Spot on... 😜

  • @tonyfreeman1258
    @tonyfreeman1258 11 лет назад +12

    I really enjoyed Coltrane's interpretation of "My Favorite Things'. I thought is was bold, brazen and ahead of its time!

  • @juanrobertonavarro650
    @juanrobertonavarro650 8 лет назад +16

    Just amazing. Brilliant. Coltrane... What a genius!

  • @MrBongoagogo
    @MrBongoagogo 9 лет назад +17

    that groove elvin plays its just flpws so well and then latter attack the ride and toms

  • @jimmyshingle934
    @jimmyshingle934 8 лет назад +9

    Innovator..... Celebrate Coltrane... Masterpiece

  • @MarceloGMonteiro21
    @MarceloGMonteiro21 11 месяцев назад +2

    This is a gem!! 👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽

  • @RichardASalisbury1
    @RichardASalisbury1 8 лет назад +8

    Another great occasion of Trane and friends playing "My Favorite Things."

  • @butterfly79ization
    @butterfly79ization 8 лет назад +20

    So Much Talent, Truly - all of these guys... but Coltrane still Stands in a League of his own!. It's Undeniable!!!

  • @SR009s
    @SR009s 5 лет назад +7

    This is, by far, the best song i have ever heard from coltrane (the album version). Everything about it is perfect in every possible way.
    Easily a top 3, of all time, song.

  • @earlgarcia6106
    @earlgarcia6106 4 года назад +6

    When you click the video and realize it’s actually Trane playing...shit gets real

  • @franklyntaylor4432
    @franklyntaylor4432 8 лет назад +33

    THIS SONG... Coltrane(My favorite musician of all time)and this incredible group of musicians... Top 10 song all time... All genres included.

  • @igormma5150
    @igormma5150 6 лет назад +12

    Elvim jones é absurdo como pode por tanta nota num compasso em 3/4 monstro da batera

  • @dannyboy1731
    @dannyboy1731 11 лет назад +4

    ''I have to give credit to the sound engineers the way the music sounds coming from the computer speakers so clean given the time it was recorded they did a great job cleaning it up for us.''

  • @geraldjohnson848
    @geraldjohnson848 9 лет назад +2

    Sept.23: Happy birthday Mr John Coltrane (1926-1967) Thank you and God bless. RIP, 'Trane. Thanks for the upload. Blessings

  • @canaldofelipe6808
    @canaldofelipe6808 5 лет назад +3

    From many Coltrane’s master pieces, my favorite things is the one who makes me thankful for the life. Simply like that !!

  • @Cespinozas
    @Cespinozas 5 лет назад +8

    This one is my favorite because of Eric Dolphy he was probably the only one who practiced as much as trane . There’s another live video of I want to talk about you that’s also mint .

  • @michaelsteinthal3447
    @michaelsteinthal3447 7 месяцев назад +2

    My favorite Coltrane piece
    Takes me far and inner.

    • @nyterpfan
      @nyterpfan 7 месяцев назад

      You get transported to a more beautiful place when you listen to this--without question!

  • @picardbs
    @picardbs 9 лет назад +8

    Simply wonderful

  • @billytuesday4492
    @billytuesday4492 8 месяцев назад

    JC's ending solo in the Live in Paris (1961) version is the most amazing thing I've ever heard

  • @YungKaioken
    @YungKaioken 2 года назад +3

    The definition of jazz music right here 💜

  • @nateo6518
    @nateo6518 4 года назад +1

    I'm crying, but I cry easy

  • @LaCheleWallace
    @LaCheleWallace 4 года назад +4

    This is beautiful, fellas. When Mr. Eric Dolphy went off on that flute, I was too through. Great performance.

  • @darylmichael7
    @darylmichael7 6 лет назад +7

    Pure, another dimension level genius. Wow. I’d loved to have heard Coltrane Quintet battle Miles, Wayne Shorter, Herbie, Carter and Tony Williams. A brother can dream, right? 😁

  • @ogagaerebor
    @ogagaerebor 2 месяца назад

    I've had this sound in my head for like the past 3 years without remembering where I heard it from. 😂😂😂 so glad to come across it again.

  • @harryschaefer5887
    @harryschaefer5887 6 лет назад +9

    This is just what I needed to hear after being on hold for at least 20 minutes waiting for my pharmacy to pick up and listening to crappy muzak

  • @DuckWitDa30
    @DuckWitDa30 3 года назад +1

    This is the Best Version

  • @beahafkenscheid8421
    @beahafkenscheid8421 4 года назад +5

    Wonderful experience, great ensemble of top class musicians.

  • @sherriekoberevans3935
    @sherriekoberevans3935 4 года назад +4

    As I listen 2020 Sept 19 sends a thrill and I fill up with tears for a lost love thanks forever we can go back time and time again to enjoy

  • @diegofecchio
    @diegofecchio 5 лет назад +2

    What a groove... What a groove!!!

  • @haloskater24
    @haloskater24 9 лет назад +6

    Reminds me of my childhood

  • @jazzweather
    @jazzweather 7 лет назад +2

    What a crackling performance by John Coltrane! Especially the second part after Eric Dolphy, Coltrane at his best, virtuoso, experimental, intense and melodic. And awesome work by Elvin Jones on drums, felt like he could go on for ever. Got to be one of the best performances ever!

  • @dnick49
    @dnick49 Месяц назад

    WoW ! The master's at work.Fantastic !!!!

  • @claudiovilches8025
    @claudiovilches8025 2 месяца назад

    Estoy llorando, que tema Dios! Coltrane llego al mundo como regalo de los dioses

  • @siemonjf
    @siemonjf 9 лет назад +10

    a living treasure,
    when he lived did we know this?
    living treasure passed

  • @siemonjf
    @siemonjf 10 лет назад +8

    living treasure,'Trane,
    timeless,bouyant journey flows...
    thank you brother John

  • @orionsbeltjazz6601
    @orionsbeltjazz6601 9 лет назад +4

    Intemporel, magique ELVIN, du 3/4 à l'état pur.

  • @Tyrell_Corp2019
    @Tyrell_Corp2019 3 года назад +1

    Back in the 90's, I bought this VHS. I remember it had two distinct performances. I believe the one with Dolphy was from a German television broadcast. The other was recorded perhaps the US? Finding performances like this, was really difficult. I hope those who are growing up with YT can appreciate the abundance of historic footage now available... at the click of a button. I must have popped this VHS into my machine at 1AM with a friend countless times. Analyzing it like it was gold. Well... it still is!

  • @barbaravire6439
    @barbaravire6439 11 лет назад +4

    Love me John Coltrane and expert in what he does their not to many Albums I don't have Coltrane love this guy! one of the greatest to ever grace the industry pure majic!! wow!

  • @dagostinoification
    @dagostinoification 10 лет назад +5

    Un de mes thèmes favoris...Fabuleux groupe ! Solos incroyables ...GENIUS...

    • @rinahall
      @rinahall 3 года назад

      Ta gueule toi

  • @gianfrancob6352
    @gianfrancob6352 11 лет назад +5

    i'll always love this standard

  • @donwesley72
    @donwesley72 10 лет назад +1

    The Master Saxophonist John Coltrane. Great historical video.

  • @pauldonald827
    @pauldonald827 7 лет назад +1

    In my view one of the greatest artistic achievements of the 20th century was John Coltrane's quartet/quintet discovering, modifying and perfecting My Favouite Things. Genius.